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Streamable Creator Spotlight: Chibu

A creator profile of Chibu, the Twitch Partner and YouTube creator behind Just Chatting streams, IRL videos, Marvel Rivals sessions, and Chibu Live.

Written by Ryan Trark

7 min readcreator spotlightChibutwitchjust chattingirlyoutube

Who is Chibu?

Chibu is a Twitch Partner and YouTube creator who has been building his name through Just Chatting, IRL, reactions, public videos, Marvel Rivals, and the kind of live stream titles that already sound like something happened before you even click. His Twitch bio says he is on the come up, working toward his dreams, and making YouTube content. That is honestly the cleanest way to describe the channel: he is still pushing, still posting, and still trying to turn more people into regulars.

Public Twitch profile data checked on July 4, 2026 showed Chibu with 118,800 followers, Partner status, and a Twitch account created on April 19, 2021. The same public Twitch profile links out to X, TikTok, Instagram, Linktree, and YouTube. Chibu is not only sitting on one live page. He is clearly trying to build the full creator setup around the stream.

The easiest version is this: Chibu is a live-first creator with YouTube roots. Some people know him from Twitch. Some find the clips. Some find the public videos. Some find the live channel uploads. But the energy is pretty consistent across all of it. He wants the stream to feel like something is always about to happen, even when the plan is only to talk, react, play, or walk around with a camera.

The live channel right now

Chibu's current Twitch mix is not hard to read. Recent public VODs had Just Chatting, IRL, and Marvel Rivals all sitting next to each other. On July 4, 2026, public Twitch data showed him live in Marvel Rivals with a Diamond-to-Celestial ranked title and the CDG4L tag in the title. A few days earlier, the VOD list had a long Just Chatting stream titled around top-tier reacts, another IRL stream titled With Ronaldo, and more Chibangin Back titles.

That matters because the channel does not feel like one narrow category. Chibu can be in a game, in a room, outside, reacting to something, talking through chat, or doing a long IRL block, and it all still reads as Chibu content. The title language is part of it too. CDG4L, Chibangin Back, top slime, desktop streams, Atlanta, gym, streamer tryouts: the words feel like they belong to a room that already has its own jokes.

TwitchTracker listed Chibu as an English-language Partner channel and showed him in Twitch's top 0.11% by its public rank. For the selected public period, it showed 119 hours streamed, 286 average viewers, an 8,845 peak, and 1,683 followers gained. TwitchMetrics showed another recent public window with 147 hours live, 31,271 viewer hours, 212 average viewers, a 5,319 peak, and 1,785 followers gained.

Those numbers say a lot without needing to overdo it. Chibu is not just uploading random clips and hoping people remember him. He is putting in real live hours. The audience is not always massive, but the ceiling is clearly there, and the base is real enough that a normal stream can turn into a bigger night fast.

Why viewers like him

Viewers love watching Chibu because he does not make the stream feel too precious. A lot of creators act like every stream needs to be perfectly packaged before it can start. Chibu is more fun when it feels like he hit live and decided the day was going to become content one way or another.

That is why the Just Chatting and IRL parts fit him so well. Chibu can get a title out of a gym day, an Atlanta stream, a hangout, a stream tryout, a reaction block, or a regular desktop setup. He does not need a huge production idea every time. The point is the person on camera, the chat around him, and the fact that the stream can move into a different lane without asking permission.

The recent VOD titles help explain the tone. One was about Atlanta streamer tryouts. One was about hitting the gym in Atlanta. One had With Ronaldo in the title. One was top-tier reacts. One was the Marvel Rivals ranked grind. These are not clean little episode names. They sound like a creator living out loud and letting the title carry some of the inside jokes with it.

That style can get messy, but that is also why it feels alive. The best Chibu streams are not trying to sound like a showrunner made a schedule. They feel like something is already happening and viewers are joining mid-conversation. Fans like that because it gives them a reason to stay in chat instead of only waiting for a polished clip later.

Chibu also has a natural underdog line built into the public bio. He is literally telling people he is on the come up. For fans, that makes the channel easier to root for. You are not only watching someone who already made it and is protecting the brand. You are watching someone who still talks like the grind is right in front of him.

The YouTube side

Chibu's main YouTube channel is under the @ChibuDunga handle. Public YouTube metadata checked on July 4, 2026 showed about 31,400 subscribers. The recent public RSS feed had Chibu's Official Streamer University Trailer at the top, then older uploads like I RANDOMLY STARTED BOXING, Showering During College Lecture Prank, Abuela Thought I Was An ATL Demon, FUNNIEST PRANKS OF 2023, She Wanted Me For Christmas, Hitting Licks On Halloween, and She Tried To Put Me On With Her Daughter.

That older YouTube list is useful because it shows the kind of creator Chibu has been trying to be for a while. It is public-video internet: pranks, social bits, awkward conversations, boxing, mall situations, holiday jokes, college jokes, and titles written to make someone click before they even know the setup.

You can see the bridge from there to Twitch pretty clearly. A creator who is comfortable walking up to a situation with a camera is usually going to have an easier time with IRL streaming than someone who only knows how to sit still and play. Chibu's YouTube history looks like training for the Twitch side: talk fast, keep moving, react honestly, and trust that the funny part can happen in the room.

The Streamer University trailer is also a good sign of where his head is at now. Chibu is not treating YouTube as some forgotten archive. He is still using it to frame bigger creator ideas, and the trailer format makes sense for someone trying to turn a Twitch audience into a wider internet audience.

Chibu Live

Chibu also has a second YouTube channel called Chibu Live, with public metadata showing it as the official live channel. That page is smaller than the main channel, but it is important because it shows how the stream turns into longer YouTube pieces.

The Chibu Live feed has uploads around Adin Ross, Brand Risk boxing, is0kenny, a hairstylist rating streamers and YouTubers, New York food and shopping videos, a Chick-fil-A mukbang, an underground cypher, soccer against a D1 player, a blind date, viewer e-dates, and a long video with Agent and Ash Alk. That is a very specific mix: creator friends, social situations, food, sports, dating bits, music-adjacent content, and stream-room arguments.

That second channel makes the Twitch channel feel bigger. A live stream can disappear from chat pretty fast after it ends, but a live-channel upload gives people another way in. Someone might not watch a full Twitch VOD, but they might click a video about Chibu going on Adin Ross's stream or a blind date segment. That is how live creators keep new people finding the channel even when they were not there live.

It also shows that Chibu is comfortable being part of a wider creator circle. The names and formats on Chibu Live are not random. They point to the kind of internet he is around: streamers, public challenges, dating content, food stops, boxing, music, and long hangout videos where the actual draw is the people talking to each other.

The social setup

Chibu's Linktree keeps the public accounts together: Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, Twitch, X, and Chibu Live. The page says to follow the socials to stay in tune with what he is doing, which fits the channel pretty well. Chibu is not the kind of creator where one platform tells the full story.

X public metadata for @chibudunga showed the account was created in June 2013 and had more than 14,700 followers when checked. The profile also pointed people back to Twitch. That older X account is interesting because it means the name did not pop up last week. Chibu has had some version of the online handle around for years, even though the Twitch account itself started in 2021.

The bigger point is that Chibu's internet presence is built for fans who move around. Twitch is for the live room. YouTube is for the main videos. Chibu Live is for stream uploads. TikTok and Instagram are for the faster discovery loop. X is for updates and creator-side posts. Linktree is the map when someone only knows one handle and wants the rest.

For a creator in this lane, that matters. IRL and Just Chatting creators usually grow when people can catch the personality in more than one format. A clip might introduce someone. A YouTube video might make them understand the style. A Twitch stream might make them stick around.

What makes the channel click

Chibu's channel clicks when he sounds like someone who is still hungry. Not in a fake motivational way. More like he actually believes the next stream, next video, next collab, or next wild title can move him forward. That kind of belief is easy for viewers to feel through the screen.

The channel also has range without feeling random. Marvel Rivals gives him a competitive game to grind. Just Chatting gives him space to react and talk. IRL gives the stream room to breathe. YouTube lets him turn a bigger idea into a cleaner upload. Chibu Live lets stream pieces keep moving after Twitch chat is gone.

The funniest part is that the channel is still pretty unfiltered in how it presents itself. Chibu's titles do not sound like a content calendar. They sound like something he would actually say. That matters because fans can smell overproduced creator language fast. Chibu's lane is better when it feels close to the source.

That does not mean every stream needs to be loud. Some of the appeal is just watching someone figure it out live. The Marvel Rivals grind, the long reaction blocks, the Atlanta streams, the gym title, the Streamer University trailer, the live-channel uploads, all of it points to someone throwing a lot at the wall and learning what people care about.

And honestly, that is a fun stage to watch. Fans get to feel like they are early enough to matter, but not so early that nothing is happening. Chibu already has the Partner badge, the follower count, the videos, the links, and the stream history. Now the interesting part is seeing what he turns it into.

Where to follow Chibu

Twitch is the main place to watch Chibu live, especially for Just Chatting, IRL, Marvel Rivals, reactions, and longer community streams.

The main YouTube channel is the best place for produced Chibu videos, older public-video uploads, and bigger creator ideas like the Streamer University trailer.

Chibu Live is the place to catch stream-focused uploads and longer live moments after they leave Twitch. Linktree is the easiest place to find the full public set of accounts, including Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, Twitch, X, and the live channel.

The quick version

Chibu is a Twitch Partner and YouTube creator with more than 118,000 Twitch followers, a 2021 Twitch account, and an active mix of Just Chatting, IRL, reactions, Marvel Rivals, and live-channel uploads.

His public story is pretty easy to follow: start from YouTube, keep pushing live, build the socials around the stream, and turn normal days into videos people can watch later.

Fans watch because Chibu feels like he is still chasing the next jump. The stream has creator friends, games, reactions, IRL plans, long hours, and enough personality that even a normal title can feel like it might turn into something.

Streamable is happy to support Chibu's streams and help keep them running clean so he can stay live without dealing with tech issues.

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What does this guide help with?

A creator profile of Chibu, the Twitch Partner and YouTube creator behind Just Chatting streams, IRL videos, Marvel Rivals sessions, and Chibu Live.

How long should this setup take?

Most users can complete this in about 7 to 9 minutes, depending on their current setup.

Where should I start first?

Start from the first section in this guide and follow each instruction in order.

What if the issue still is not resolved?

Re-check each setting in this guide, restart OBS, and test again. If needed, contact Streamable support or join Discord for help with your exact setup.

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